The World Wants Greenland's Minerals, but Greenlanders Are Wary (nytimes.com) 73
The island has rare elements needed for electric cars and wind turbines. But protesters are blocking one project, signaling that mining companies must tread carefully. From a report: This huge, remote and barely habited island is known for frozen landscapes, remote fjords and glaciers that heave giant sheets of ice into the sea. But increasingly Greenland is known for something else: rare minerals. It's all because of climate change and the world's mad dash to accelerate the development of green technology. As global warming melts the ice that covers 80 percent of the island, it has spurred demand for Greenland's potentially abundant reserves of hard-to-find minerals with names like neodymium and dysprosium. These so-called rare earths, used in wind turbines, electric motors and many other electronic devices, are essential raw materials as the world tries to break its addiction to fossil fuels.
China has a near monopoly on these minerals. The realization that Greenland could be a rival supplier has set off a modern gold rush. Global superpowers are jostling for influence. Billionaire investors are making big bets. Mining companies have staked claims throughout the island in a quest that also includes nickel, cobalt, titanium and, yes, gold. But those expecting to exploit the island's riches will have to contend with Mariane Paviasen and the predominantly Indigenous residents of the village of Narsaq. Until she was elected to Greenland's Parliament in April, Ms. Paviasen was manager of a heliport that provided one of the few ways to get to Narsaq, a village at the mouth of a fjord on the island's southwest coast. The forces reshaping the planet -- extreme weather caused by rising temperatures, and rising demand for electric vehicles and other green technology that require bits of rare metals -- converge at Narsaq, where fishing is the main industry and most people live in brightly colored wooden houses with tar paper roofs.
China has a near monopoly on these minerals. The realization that Greenland could be a rival supplier has set off a modern gold rush. Global superpowers are jostling for influence. Billionaire investors are making big bets. Mining companies have staked claims throughout the island in a quest that also includes nickel, cobalt, titanium and, yes, gold. But those expecting to exploit the island's riches will have to contend with Mariane Paviasen and the predominantly Indigenous residents of the village of Narsaq. Until she was elected to Greenland's Parliament in April, Ms. Paviasen was manager of a heliport that provided one of the few ways to get to Narsaq, a village at the mouth of a fjord on the island's southwest coast. The forces reshaping the planet -- extreme weather caused by rising temperatures, and rising demand for electric vehicles and other green technology that require bits of rare metals -- converge at Narsaq, where fishing is the main industry and most people live in brightly colored wooden houses with tar paper roofs.
Re:They are doomed (Score:4, Insightful)
You all laughed when Trump commented about buying Greenland ...
To be fair, Trump simply thinks everything and everyone (else) is for sale.
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True, but who would have known fahrbot-bot's mom had such a low price.
I guess with the advancement in robotics, the old models don't fetch much anymore.
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There's an old joke about a wealthy man talking to a famous actress. After asking her if she would sleep with a stranger for a million dollars she delivers an enthusiastic, "Yes!" He then inquires if she would do the same for five dollars. Offended, she fumes: "Five dollars? What kind of woman do you think I am?"
"We've already established that," the man rejoins. "Now we're just haggling over the price."
Re: They are doomed (Score:1)
Churchill in the house of commons. Is it not a real event?
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There's an old joke about a wealthy man talking to a famous actress.
Not an actress, an upper class British woman and Prime Minister Churchill. Another woman told him that if he were her husband she would poison him, his response was "Madam if I were your husband I would take it". Bit of a smart ass :) .
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To be fair, Trump simply thinks everything and everyone (else) is for sale.
To be fair, THE US simply thinks everything and everyone (else) is for sale.
FIFY, partisan hack
Your statement doesn't invalidate my statement. Your condescension is misplaced.
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People laughed when Reagan joked about bombing Russia. [history.com] How's that working out so far?
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Laughing or bombing? I'm from the make-humor-not-war camp.
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When was the last time anyone dropped bombs on Russia?
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Not really, no. Bombs are explosives dropped from planes or sometimes drones.
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When was the last time anyone dropped bombs on Russia?
March 1969.
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Who deployed airborne munitions in '89 in the Soviet Union?
Actually quite well! (Score:1)
People laughed when Reagan joked about bombing Russia. How's that working out so far?
Working out pretty well for Russia since the U.S. Approving the Nord Stream 2 pipeline shut off massive revenue to the Ukrane and handed the EU over to Putin [reuters.com]...
U.S, BFF with Russia and China now!
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You all laughed when Trump commented about buying Greenland, but he was probably just let slipping an aspect of the 50 year U.S. master plan.
And we still laugh because the notion is still ludicrous because the man is an idiot if he thinks "buying" another sovereign nature is the answer. 50 year master plan? What plans? The entire Trump administration was basically winging it every day. Those who have worked with Trump notes he changed his goals from one conversation to the next.
Re:They are doomed (Score:4, Informative)
Sorta like the US purchase of the Louisiana Territory or Alaska or the German purchase of islands in the south pacific or areas in the Netherlands or the UK purchase of Singapore or USSR purchase of land in Finland.
Nations have been buying land from other nations for centuries.
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"When has a country purchased another sovereign nation?"
The Brits did invade 150 'nations' but they had no flag.
Re:They are doomed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:They are doomed (Score:4, Interesting)
Greenland isn't sovereign, it is a territory owned by the Danish and is granted a degree of autonomy. Canada has been disputing ownership of an uninhabited island that is off the coast of Greenland with the Danish .
That's more of a mutual prank than a conflict. When the Canadians visit the island they leave a bottle of whiskey under a rock with a message that says: "Welcome to Canada", When the Danes pay the place a visit they take the Whiskey and replace it with a bottle of Schnapps and a message that says: "Welcome to Denmark". This cycle has been repeating since at least 1984.
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Someone should go there and replace whatever is currently there with a bottle of maple syrup and a message that says "Welcome to the Québec-Vermont Alliance!"
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I think it would be interesting for the US ti stsrt offering to buy and merge small countries.
Any outrage you feel plays into the hands of the local dictators, skilled blabbers who will pontificate about sovereignity. Free people living safely in the west buy into it, but generation after generation living in dictatorship there, looking forward to more decades, might not share your view.
Besides, if we just adopt other nations as new territories, they become US, combined with its benefits like freedom and r
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You all laughed when Trump commented about buying Greenland, but he was probably just let slipping an aspect of the 50 year U.S. master plan.
When Trump brought up buying Greenland there were people that pointed out that there were proposals of the USA buying Greenland since World War 2. This was not a new idea, Trump didn't think of it first, and Trump likely brought it up because he remembered hearing about it in his youth and now that he was POTUS he could actually do something about it.
The US Space Force operates a base on Greenland and given the small population of Greenland it is quite likely a large proportion of the people living in Gree
Re:They are doomed (Score:5, Insightful)
You all laughed when Trump commented about buying Greenland, but he was probably just let slipping an aspect of the 50 year U.S. master plan.
When Trump brought up buying Greenland there were people that pointed out that there were proposals of the USA buying Greenland since World War 2. This was not a new idea, Trump didn't think of it first, and Trump likely brought it up because he remembered hearing about it in his youth and now that he was POTUS he could actually do something about it.
Bull. Despite the title of this Wikipedia page [wikipedia.org] the only section on it mentioning the purchase the island is Trump's scheme. In particular the whole section on post World War II interest in it never mentions any scheme or proposal or interest in buying it. It is entirely about the U.S. setting military bases there, as it has in many other countries.
This post is reminiscent of right-wing nonsense about Trump commenting on obscure research from decades ago when he mused at a press conference last year about letting UV light cure COIV-19. It is a sad attempt to make his ignorant bloviations into something making some sort of sense.
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The US Space Force operates a base on Greenland and given the small population of Greenland it is quite likely a large proportion of the people living in Greenland are American citizens.
Less than 1% of Greenland's population is from the US. Greenland's population is 89% Inuit.
Much of the occupied land of Greenland is already controlled by the USA.
Thule is a couple square miles. There are 56,000 people in Greenland, and only 600 of them are at Thule.
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but he was probably just let slipping an aspect of the 50 year U.S. master plan.
The U.S. did block Canada from annexing Greenland in WWII so the plan could be even older. Good old knife in the back by our "friends" to the south.
Alaska (Score:1)
Alaska is an extremely rich source for minerals.
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sshush, don't givem ideas
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sshush, don't givem ideas
Right, next thing you know someone is going to suggest the USA buy Alaska.
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Need to be the right minerals. [blm.gov]
Re:Alaska (Score:4, Interesting)
Despite the terrible article, (A) rare earth elements aren't rare, (B) the main limitation is refining, and (C) Greenland is not known to be a particularly huge source of them - it's one in a long list [azomining.com] of potential untapped Greenlandic resources, but it's not like 90% of Greenland's untapped value is rare earths. They just picked the one resource that they thought would make for the best byline, because anything having to do with EVs gets headlines.
Re: Alaska (Score:1)
Yeah. The US fucks it over too.
(20 year resident)
Not so much (Score:1)
The reason the PRC has a near monopoly on them is because refining them generates an immense amount of pollution.
Since Mao can mandate that the sky is blue and the air is pure this has never been an issue for the CPC.
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If so what does that tell us will happen to Greenland? Be kind of ironic using dirty means for "green" initiatives.
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It's still very beautiful. [youtu.be]
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Yeah... through a process called fusion... and for elements with those kinds of proton counts, only during supernova explosions.
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I think he's confused with the fact that (if I have this right) the ore tends to contain all of them, because they're chemically similar and tend to accumulate together. So ore that is rich enough in one to make it worth mining can usually also be processed to extract some of the others if the later become of sufficient value to pu
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Mountain Pass is actually back open. Main constraint is still processing. They're not expected to have a full supply chain - from ore to various processing stages all the way to magnet production - until 2025. There are other projects like Round Top which are codeveloping processing with mining. It's clear that at this point in time, just having a mine isn't enough.
Re:Not so much (Score:5, Interesting)
Though the US has quite a bit of them and had some mines, the cost of meeting environmental regulations has made them unprofitable and shut them down.
The problem as I understand it is that there's no good way to deal with the thorium. Rare earth elements tend to be in ores that are also rich in thorium, and because under federal law thorium is considered "weapon grade material" if above a certain concentration the mining tails would have to be treated like it was plutonium. That means we can't just pile up for later like China does with their thorium. In the USA it would have to be trucked off to a government radioactive waste site and put in a hole there, and guarded like it was plutonium.
China is piling up thorium with the intent to use it for nuclear reactor fuel, something the USA should be doing too. There's nothing wrong with piling up thorium, it's not going to go critical like plutonium. It's not water soluble, and it's quite dense so it's not like it will just blow away.
The regulations are quite stupid and there are people lobbying to get them fixed so we can mine rare earth elements in the USA at a price people would be willing to pay.
There's a few good videos on REEs and the "thorium problem" at Gordon McDowell's YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/gord... [youtube.com]
Alchamy Is NOT Dead (Score:2)
Rare earths are no so rare and if you have one you can process it into the others.
Really? Oh well then.
Church of Greed is upset (Score:1)
Preservation over profits & consumerism? Blasphemy! What's this world coming to?
Like many things... (Score:5, Interesting)
Meanwhile, here's a map of known rare earth deposits:
https://mrdata.usgs.gov/catalo... [usgs.gov]
I certainly don't see any Chinese monopoly there. Do you? Anyone?
Stop whining, cough up a few extra bucks per kilo so the refinery workers don't die immediately of heavy metal poisoning or cancer, and suddenly all those mines in civilized countries will be viable. The issue will become a non-issue.
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The media hysteria is really far overblown. No, China does NOT have a near monopoly on rare earths. China simply sells rare earths 3 cents cheaper per kilogram than anywhere else. Because they don't amortize the environmental and safety costs related to the mining and refining. Rare earth refining is VERY dirty. In any case, all the businesses wring their hands and say "oh so sad there's NO WAY I could buy them ANYWHERE ELSE".
You seem to think geographic diversity matters here. See all those mines in Africa? Guess who owns, leases, runs, or has exclusive contracts with most of them?
https://www.ide.go.jp/English/... [ide.go.jp]
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I hear Afghanistan represents a growth opportunity. [theconversation.com] Get in before the Chinese do.
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It's not about where they are; it's about who's outfitted to process them. The fact that the US could produce them (and is indeed working towards rare earth independence) doesn't mean that it has that capability now, at the moment; they're still several years away.
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China is basically doing what UK did to India. Lay railroads from cotton growing areas, mineral ores to the port, ship all raw materials out and import value added goods and just devastate the local economy completely.
When UK did that, the Indian Maharajahs were clueless, they were fighting among themselves, they did not realize what is really goi
Baffin Island (Score:2)
Pretty close, not so many glaciers. I'd be surprised if there weren't a commercial quantity there. But then again, Canada has a bunch of environmental laws to get through before a new mine can be started. So much that companies don't bother much with opening new mines in Canada anymore. I wonder how that would crash with Prime Minister Sock Boy's environmental narratives.
But here is another interesting point (for some). The only country in the world that completely recognizes Canada's ownership of the far n
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Canada is Quietly Building The Trading Empire Of The World. [youtu.be]
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The Northwest Passage is a shipping channel, not a trading empire. There is no trade involved. There is no money for Canada unless it can monetize it.
From 13:30 in the video this is well discussed.
But to add to it, given that ships from nations will eventually be able to travel through it, it actually means that there would be a bigger argument that Canada doesn't own the area exclusively. Especially given that no significant Canadian communities (other than a few Innuit villages) along the route. And Canad
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Landfill (Score:2)
As a species, we've been using landfills to manage large-volume waste since the days of the Industrial Revolution. Now obviously, it's only been as we've seen technology move towards widespread adoption of rechargeable devices that some of the rare earth minerals have become important... but at the same ti
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Going through a landfill is like any other mining operation. You'll have to figure out how to separate the junk into components you might want, and that assumes crap that is water soluble hasn't filtered into the water table to parts unknown.
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It is actually quite different from any other mining operation. Mines normally exploit mineral deposits that develop naturally and have well understood compositions based on how they developed. The predictable chemistry and patterns of occurrence are used to establish processing systems that use fairly simple chemical processes to concentrate the desired elements.
The predictability of landfill composition is more limited and you must deal with an enormous array of stuff. Also, for most stuff you might want
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Agreed that the "ore" is of low quality. And yes there is variance. But sufficient study of landfill strata based on date of disposal should yield some fairly accurate predictions about composition of landfill material. You know there's going to be methane pockets, for example.
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rechargeable devices that some of the rare earth minerals have become important.
Rare earths are used in magnets, not batteries.
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Data point (Score:3)
A slight elaboration on this is in order.
China has a near monopoly on extracting these minerals. Deposits do exist in other countries, but mining is messy. China is the only country willing to extract them at large scale.
example: There is an abundant rare earth mineral deposit in the middle of the Sheephole Valley Wilderness area [usgs.gov] in California.
Switch maps (Score:3)
Greenland should get the world to stop using Mercator projection maps. They'll see there's less to plunder and leave them alone.
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Of course Greenlanders are wary (Score:2)
Greenland has already quite a few invasive installations that have become environmental disasters, or are at risk of becoming even worse.
These include a few mines, but most of all: US military bases that USA has refused to clean up.
There are fears of there being abandoned nuclear installations under the ice that are at risk of getting exposed as the warming progresses.
(and the warming is faster in the Arctic than the global average)